American Pop: TV and the 1950s Living Room Revolution by Taylor Prescott
English | April 8, 2025 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0F47FBB65 | 223 pages | EPUB | 29 Mb
English | April 8, 2025 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0F47FBB65 | 223 pages | EPUB | 29 Mb
In the decade when television transformed from novelty to necessity, a new American identity took shape in the flickering blue light of the family living room. "America Through the Screen" offers a thoughtful exploration of television's golden age and its profound influence on our cultural DNA.
From Lucy Ricardo's chocolate-factory mishaps to Edward R. Murrow's confrontation with McCarthyism, from the suburban fantasies of "Father Knows Best" to the racial exclusion that limited who appeared on screen, this book examines how the medium simultaneously reflected and reinvented American life during a pivotal decade of change.
Moving beyond simple nostalgia, each chapter illuminates a different facet of this cultural revolution: the birth of televised news and its power to shape public opinion; the commercials that transformed consumerism into national identity; the children's shows that created shared experiences across geographic boundaries; and the variety programs that brought Elvis Presley, Broadway performances, and opera singers into homes that had never before accessed such entertainment diversity.
Drawing connections between these black-and-white broadcasts and our contemporary digital landscape, "America Through the Screen" reveals how the patterns established in the 1950s continue to influence how we consume media, relate to celebrities, structure our domestic spaces, and understand ourselves as Americans.
Perfect for media scholars, cultural historians, and anyone who grew up watching Howdy Doody or The Twilight Zone, this book invites readers to reconsider a transformative decade when America's living rooms became the frontiers of a new visual culture whose influence still resonates through our screens today.